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Expedition 69





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Expedition 69 was the 69th long-duration expedition to the International Space Station. The expedition began with the uncrewed departure of Soyuz MS-22 in March 2023 with Russian cosmonaut Sergey Prokopyev continuing his ISS command from Expedition 68.[1] It ended with his departure with his crewmates onboard Soyuz MS-23 on 27 September 2023.[2]

Expedition 69
Promotional poster
Mission typeLong-duration mission to ISS
OperatorNASA / Roscosmos
Mission duration182 days, 21 hours and 57 minutes
Expedition
Space stationInternational Space Station
Began28 March 2023
Ended27 September 2023
Arrived aboardSoyuz MS-23 (uncrewed launch)
SpaceX Crew-6
Soyuz MS-24
SpaceX Crew-7
Departed aboardSoyuz MS-23
SpaceX Crew-6
Crew
Crew size7–11
Members
  • Expedition 67/68/69:
  • Sergey Prokopyev
  • Dmitry Petelin
  • Francisco Rubio
  • Expedition 68/69:
  • Stephen Bowen
  • Warren Hoburg
  • Sultan Al Neyadi
  • Andrey Fedyaev
  • Expedition 69/70:
  • Jasmin Moghbeli
  • Andreas Mogensen
  • Satoshi Furukawa
  • Konstantin Borisov
  • Loral O'Hara
  • Expedition 69/70/71:
  • Oleg Kononenko
  • Nikolai Chub
  • EVAs8
    EVA duration51 hours and 58 minutes

    Expedition 69 mission patch

    Expedition 69 crew portrait  
    Expedition 69 crew during dinner with Axiom Mission 2[a] members while celebrating Sultan Al Neyadi's birthday inside the Unity module[3] (not pictured is NASA astronaut Francisco Rubio)

    Background, Crew and Events

    edit

    Initially, the expedition consisted of Prokopyev and his two Soyuz MS-22/23 crewmates, Dmitry Petelin from Russia and American astronaut Francisco Rubio, as well as American astronauts Stephen G. Bowen and Warren Hoburg, Emirati astronaut Sultan Al Neyadi, and another Russian cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev, who launched aboard SpaceX Crew-6 on March 2, 2023 and were transferred from Expedition 68 alongside the Soyuz MS-22/23 crew.[4] The departure of the MS-22 spacecraft with its crew was ultimately canceled because of a coolant leak[5] in December 2022. The decision was made to return Soyuz MS-22 uncrewed and launch Soyuz MS-23 uncrewed[5] as its replacement. By the time the MS-22/23 crew returned to Earth on 27 September 2023, which was the end of Expedition 69, they had spent more than a year in space due to their mission extension.[6][7][8]

    The manifest changes do not affect US crew rotation plans, where SpaceX Crew-5 was replaced by Crew-6 in February during Expedition 68.[9]

    Previously, US crew handovers since flights returned in 2020 took place during a new expedition, about 2–3 weeks after the Soyuz handover occurs (which officially changes the Expeditions). However, in this handover, the swap occurred before the Soyuz MS-22 departure date of March 28. The early US handover was a part of the manifest prior to the Soyuz MS-22 coolant leak in December 2022.[10]

    The crew was later replenished by subsequent crew rotation missions in the expedition, SpaceX Crew-7, consisting of NASA astronaut Jasmin Moghbeli, Danish astronaut Andreas Mogensen, Satoshi Furukawa from Japan, and Russian cosmonaut Konstantin Borisov, and Soyuz MS-24, consisting of Russian cosmonauts Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub (both on a year long ISS mission) and another American astronaut Loral O'Hara. The space station was also visited by a non-expedition crew, Axiom Mission 2, consisting of former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson (who had previously commanded the station twice during Expedition 16 and Expedition 51), John Shoffner, Ali AlQarni, and Rayyanah Barnawi.[2]

    Events manifest

    edit

    Previous mission: Expedition 68

    28 March 2023 – Soyuz MS-22 Uncrewed undocking, official switch from Expedition 68

    6 April 2023 – Soyuz MS-23 Redocking

    15 April 2023 – CRS SpX-27 Undocking

    16 April 2023 – EVA 1 (VKD-56): 7 hrs, 55 mins

    16 April 2023 – Relocation of Nauka outfitting: Moving "RtoD" add-on heat radiator from Rassvet moduletoNauka module

    21 April 2023 – CRS Cygnus NG-18 Unberthing & Release

    28 April 2023 – EVA 2 (US-86): 7 hrs, 1 min

    3–4 May 2023 – EVA 3 (VKD-57): 7 hrs, 11 mins

    4 May 2023 – Relocation of Nauka outfitting: Moving experiments airlock "ShK" from Rassvet moduletoNauka module forward port

    6 May 2023 – SpaceX Crew-6 Redocking

    12 May 2023 – EVA 4 (VKD-58): 5 hrs, 14 mins

    22 May 2023 – Axiom Mission 2 Docking (Non-Expedition crew)

    24 May 2023 – Progress MS-23/84P Docking[11]

    30 May 2023 – Axiom Mission 2 Undocking (Non-Expedition crew)

    1 June 2023 – SpaceX CRS-28 Docking[11]

    9 June 2023 – EVA 5 (US EVA-87): 6 hrs, 3 mins, installed the fifth iROSA at Array 1A

    15 June 2023 – EVA 6 (US EVA-88): 5 hrs, 35 mins, installed the sixth and last iROSA at Array 1B

    22 June 2023 – EVA 7 (VKD-59): 6 hrs, 24 mins

    29 June 2023 – CRS SpX-28 Undocking

    4 August 2023 – CRS Cygnus NG-19 Capture & Berthing

    9 August 2023 – EVA 8 (VKD-60): 6 hrs, 35 mins

    9 August 2023 – Relocation of Nauka outfitting: Moving European Robotic Arm's Portable Workpost from Rassvet moduletoNauka module

    20 August 2023 – Progress MS-22/83P Undocking

    25 August 2023 – Progress MS-24/85P Docking[11]

    27 August 2023 – SpaceX Crew-7 Docking[11]

    3 September 2023 – SpaceX Crew-6 Undocking

    15 September 2023 – Soyuz MS-24 Docking

    26 September 2023 – ISS Expedition 69/70 Change of Command Ceremony from Sergey ProkopyevtoAndreas Mogensen

    27 September 2023 – Soyuz MS-23 Undocking, official switch to Expedition 70

    Next: Expedition 70

    Sources:[2][12]

    Crew

    edit
    Flight Astronaut Increment 69a Increment 69b Increment 69c Increment 69d
    28 Mar – 27 Aug 2023 27 Aug – 3 Sep 2023 3–15 Sep 2023 15–27 Sep 2023
    Soyuz MS-23   Sergey Prokopyev, Roscosmos
    Second spaceflight
    Commander
      Dmitry Petelin, Roscosmos
    First spaceflight
    Flight Engineer
      Francisco Rubio, NASA
    First spaceflight
    Flight Engineer
    SpaceX Crew-6   Stephen Bowen, NASA
    Fourth spaceflight
    Flight Engineer Off Station
      Warren Hoburg, NASA
    First spaceflight
    Flight Engineer Off Station
      Sultan Al Neyadi, MBRSC
    First spaceflight
    Flight Engineer Off Station
      Andrey Fedyaev, Roscosmos
    First spaceflight
    Flight Engineer Off Station
    SpaceX Crew-7   Jasmin Moghbeli, NASA
    First spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
      Andreas Mogensen, ESA
    Second spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
     Satoshi Furukawa, JAXA
    Second spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
      Konstantin Borisov, Roscosmos
    First spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
    Soyuz MS-24   Oleg Kononenko, Roscosmos
    Fifth spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
      Nikolai Chub, Roscosmos
    First spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
      Loral O'Hara, NASA
    First spaceflight
    Off Station Flight Engineer
    Sources:[13]

    Vehicle manifest

    edit
    Vehicle Purpose Port Docking/Capture Date Undocking Date
    (if during Expedition 69)
    Vehicles inherited from Expedition 67 or Expedition 68
      CRS Cygnus NG-18 "Sally Ride" US Cargo Unity Nadir 9 Nov 2022 (Exp. 68)[14] 21 Apr 2023
      Progress MS-22/83P Russian Cargo Zvezda Aft 11 Feb 2023 (Exp. 68) 20 Aug 2023
      Soyuz MS-23/69S Exp. 67/68/69 Crew Return Poisk Zenith 24 Feb 2023 (Exp. 68)[15] 6 Apr 2023
      SpaceX Crew-6 "Endeavour" Exp. 68/69 USOS Crew Harmony Zenith 28 Feb 2023 (Exp. 68)[16] 6 May 2023
      CRS Dragon SpX-27 US Cargo Harmony Forward 16 Mar 2023 (Exp. 68)[17] 16 Apr 2023
    Vehicles docked during Expedition 69
      Soyuz MS-23/69S Exp. 67/68/69 Crew Return Prichal Nadir 6 Apr 2023 (Redock)[18] 27 Sep 2023
      SpaceX Crew-6 "Endeavour" Exp. 68/69 USOS Crew Harmony Forward 6 May 2023 (Redock)[19] 3 Sep 2023
      Axiom Mission-2 Visiting Commercial Mission Harmony Zenith 22 May 2023 30 May 2023
      Progress MS-23/84P Russian Cargo Poisk Zenith 24 May 2023 29 Nov 2023 (Exp. 70)
      CRS Dragon SpX-28 US Cargo Harmony Forward 6 Jun 2023 29 Jun 2023
      CRS Cygnus NG-19 "Laurel Clark" US Cargo Unity Nadir 4 Aug 2023 22 Dec 2023 (Exp. 70)
      Progress MS-24/85P Russian Cargo Zvezda Aft 25 Aug 2023 13 Feb 2024 (Exp. 70)
      SpaceX Crew-7 "Endurance" Exp. 69/70 USOS Crew Harmony Zenith 27 Aug 2023 11 Mar 2024 (Exp. 70)
      Soyuz MS-24/70S "Antares" Exp. 69/70 Russian Crew Rasssvet Nadir 15 Sep 2023 6 Apr 2024 (Exp. 70)

    Notes

    edit
    1. ^ First row except Sultan Al Neyadi in centre

    References

    edit
    1. ^ Garcia, Mark. "Uncrewed Soyuz Spacecraft Undocks from Station". blogs.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  • ^ a b c "Complete ISS flight events". NasaSpaceFlight.com Forum. 15 April 2023. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  • ^ @Astro_Alneyadi (May 25, 2023). "Celebrated my 1st birthday 🎂 in space with colleagues who have become family! Highlight of the day? A Maple Muffin top cake from the USA crew, a Cinnamon Bun with yoghurt and dry fruits from Russian crew, topped off with wishes in Arabic. Truly a gravity-defying celebration! 😃" (Tweet). Retrieved 2023-05-26 – via Twitter.
  • ^ Garcia, Mark. "Uncrewed Soyuz Spaceship Lands in Kazakhstan". blogs.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  • ^ a b Foust, Jeff (2023-01-11). "Roscosmos to launch uncrewed Soyuz to replace damaged spacecraft at ISS". SpaceNews. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  • ^ "International Space Station Operations, Soyuz Status Update – Space Station". blogs.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  • ^ "Roscosmos and NASA Have a Plan to Replace Damaged Soyuz Spacecraft at ISS". Gizmodo. 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  • ^ Wattles, Ashley Strickland,Jackie (2023-01-11). "Roscosmos will send replacement spacecraft to return crew to Earth after Soyuz leak". CNN. Retrieved 2023-01-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Josh Dinner (2023-01-10). "SpaceX and NASA target Crew-6 astronaut launch in mid-February". Space.com. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  • ^ "SpaceX launches first NASA astronauts to fly from US since shuttle | collectSPACE". collectSPACE.com. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  • ^ a b c d "Launch Schedule – Spaceflight Now". Retrieved 2023-02-23.
  • ^ "Microgravity Research Flights". Glenn Research Center. 10 November 2020. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  • ^ "ISS Expedition Reports". spacefacts.de. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  • ^ Navin, Joseph (2022-11-07). "SS Sally Ride Cygnus arrives at ISS on NG-18 mission". NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 2023-01-19.
  • ^ updated, Elizabeth Howell last (2023-02-22). "Watch Russia launch replacement Soyuz to International Space Station tonight (Feb. 23)". Space.com. Retrieved 2023-02-23.
  • ^ Heidler, Scott (2023-02-22). "Launch date postponed for SpaceX Crew-6". WESH. Retrieved 2023-02-23.
  • ^ https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2023/03/spacex-crs-27/
  • ^ https://scitechdaily.com/astronaut-and-cosmonauts-fly-soyuz-crew-ship-to-new-docking-port-on-space-station/
  • ^ Heidler, Scott (2023-02-22). "Launch date postponed for SpaceX Crew-6". WESH. Retrieved 2023-02-23.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Expedition_69&oldid=1232502392"
     



    Last edited on 4 July 2024, at 02:06  





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    This page was last edited on 4 July 2024, at 02:06 (UTC).

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